Creating the Big Easy

New Orleans and the Emergence of Modern Tourism, 1918-1945

Title Details

Pages: 344

Illustrations: 10 b&w photos, 3 figures

Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in

Formats

Paperback

Pub Date: 08/01/2006

ISBN: 9-780-8203-2822-5

List Price: $34.95

Creating the Big Easy

New Orleans and the Emergence of Modern Tourism, 1918-1945

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  • Description
  • Reviews

Between the World Wars, New Orleans transformed its image from that of a corrupt and sullied port of call into that of a national tourist destination. Anthony J. Stanonis tells how boosters and politicians reinvented the city to build a modern mass tourism industry and, along the way, fundamentally changed the city's cultural, economic, racial, and gender structure.

Stanonis looks at the importance of urban development, historic preservation, taxation strategies, and convention marketing to New Orleans' makeover and chronicles the city's efforts to domesticate its jazz scene, "democratize" Mardi Gras, and stereotype local blacks into docile, servile roles. He also looks at depictions of the city in literature and film and gauges the impact on New Orleans of white middle-class America's growing prosperity, mobility, leisure time, and tolerance of women in public spaces once considered off-limits.

Visitors go to New Orleans with expectations rooted in the city's "past": to revel with Mardi Gras maskers, soak up the romance of the French Quarter, and indulge in rich cuisine and hot music. Such a past has a basis in history, says Stanonis, but it has been carefully excised from its gritty context and scrubbed clean for mass consumption.

Stanonis gives us a New Orleans that is literal and layered. Creating the Big Easy moves New Orleans into the category of cities with definitive, tourism-based histories. Such cities, progenitors of the future, tell us much about the nature of economic, cultural, and social development.

—Hal Rothman, author of Neon Metropolis: How Las Vegas Started the Twenty-first Century

Studying chambers of commerce, politicians, preservationists and their opponents, novelists, teachers, and the tourists themselves, Stanonis details the surprisingly complex efforts behind marketing New Orleans as a city with an exotic past. The places and events—the Vieux Carre, the French Quarter, Bourbon Street, Mardi Gras, jazz—may be familiar, but the controversies over how or whether they should be tourist attractions are consistently fascinating.

—Ted Ownby, University of Mississippi

[I]nsightful and significant historical detail . . . Stanonis offers a compelling portrait of the rise of tourism in New Orleans and adds unique insight to our understanding of the city's distinctive history. The book is a thought-provoking and penetrating analysis of the early development of tourism in New Orleans and should be the starting point for historians interested in understanding the city's cultural and economic structure between the two World Wars.

Urban History

A thorough and insightful historical examination of city leaders' efforts to lay the foundation for the city's modern tourist economy.

Journal of Southern History

Stanonis's monograph contributes substantially to the growing field of tourism studies. . . . He maintains an intricate balance as he moves between the city's business advocates and preservationists, cultural defenders and critics, and politicians and outside observers. . . . His facility with period literary sources offers insight throughout.

Reviews in American History

Stanonis has contributed an invaluable foray into the origins of the contemporary New Orleans economy.

Louisiana History

About the Author/Editor

ANTHONY J. STANONIS is a lecturer in modern U.S. history at Queens University, Belfast. He is the editor of Dixie Emporium: Tourism, Foodways, and Consumer Culture in the American South and author of Creating the Big Easy: New Orleans and the Emergence of Modern Tourism, 1918–1945 (both Georgia).